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Actors "faking" accents for movies: the good, bad and ugly
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Community Manager |
I haven't seen "Blood Diamond" yet, but apparently some people think Leonardo DiCaprio's South African accent is pretty good. Having only seen the previews, I can't judge... But I can critique the "fake" accents I've heard in movies over the years, and so can you!
The worst one I can think of offhand was Kevin Costner in "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves" - the accent kept changing, coming and going. Ugh. Very distracting. Gwyneth Paltrow does a superb British accent, as evidenced in "Emma" and "Sliding Doors" - and that was before she became an expat. Hugh Laurie is amazing on "House" - I swear, the first time I heard him speak with his real accent, I almost fell over. All this time I'd assumed he was American. Honestly, sometimes I wish people would just be allowed to use their own voices and let us as the audience use our imagination. And why is it that when a movie is supposed to take place in a non-English speaking place the actors are often doing British accents? Does that make it sound more foreign or something? Anyway, what are the accents you've heard and loved or hated? |
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Ectomorphic Hegemony |
Let me say this right off, I am by no stretch of the imagination an expert on South African accents. However, I thought Leo's accent was pretty damn good in some spots but seemed to falter a bit in others. I found that even more distracting than if had been crappy all the way through.
I agree on Hugh Laurie, I had about the same reaction as you did upon hearing an interview with him. It boggles the mind, at least a simple one like mine. --------------------------------------- I don't want to be fearless, I want to be brave. |
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Curmudgeon (Moderator) |
I recently read a snarky aside in some Brit rag about the fake Kiwi accent that Anthony Hopkins affected in The World's Fastest Indian. It easily fooled me, though I am easily foolable. (Especially by BNA women)
I was very impressed with Gary Oldman's accent in The Contender (which is also a great movie). And I was completely gob smacked by Bob Hopkins' American accent in Who Framed Roger Rabbit. |
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Vagabonder |
Okay, why does Natalie Portman (Queen Amidala) in The Phantom Menace start off withh a British accent, then switch over to an American one when she's Padme?
Or is she just following Carrie Fisher's lead? Princess Leia has a British accent in her first scene in Star Wars but switches over to American for the rest of the trilogy. What gives? + + + + + + + + + + + + + + "It was the most efficient campaign I have seen in my 20 years in politics." -- Sam Burrell, alderman of Chicago's West Side 29th Ward, on the phenomeal Project Vote! voter drive of 1992 which was responsible for adding 150,000 black voters to the Chicago rolls. This helped Bill Clinton and Carol Mosley Braun win Illinois in the '92 elections. The project was spearheaded by an unknown 31-year-old lawyer and community organizer by the name of Barack Obama. http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/January-1993/Vote-of-Confidence/ http://www.brklyn-christina.blogspot.com |
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Street Food Connoisseur |
That wasn't the worst one in star wars try listening to the different Storm Trooper Commanders. They can't keep the same accent from line to line much less sceene to sceene.
__________________________ I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to move. ~Robert Louis Stevenson |
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Carbon Based Life Form |
In Star Wars there is official-speak, and then private casual-speak. That's Amidala's excuse, but Leiah's was just accidental. And it's not really british, it's just kind of formal and uppity sounding. It's a stiff star wars-the-director-has-me-acting-like-cardboard-speak. Mark Hamil should have been the director for acting, he would have set them straight.
On the original Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Facotry, Mike TeeVee starts out a bratty American kid from Arizona. By the time he's in the TV at the end, when he's shrunk, he sounds bizarre: "Am I coming in clear?" was the ironic memorable line. He said he was messed up by hanging out with the other Brit actors. The commentary on that DVD is really interesting. I don't like snobby accent experts, but sometimes it's an interesting topic. Jeremy Irons has the worst phoniest British accent I have ever heard. |
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Knows What a Schengen Visa Is |
I've met Jeremy Irons and it's exactly the way he speaks. Sorry, jedi, it's not a 'phony' British accent.
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Travel Deity |
I got addicted to Six Feet Under some time ago (luckily not anymore!) and while researching what was going on (okay, cheating and finding out about future episodes because I was behind...) I learned this: Brenda. This actress is Australian. I never would have guessed.
Also: Guy Someone in Memento. I think he's British? Doesn't sound like it. I don't think too hard about accents or feel particularly adept at picking out real or fake, but it is kind of a funny thing. I liked how in the Sound of Music, the Austrian Von Trapp family spoke with semi-British accents. Make cay, not war - Kesmen |
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Community Manager |
Guy whatshisname from "Memento" is an Aussie, I think. He was in "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert" if I remember right. And "LA Confidential." And yes, he does a good job of hiding his real accent.
Here's another - Toni Collette. Is she an Aussie or a Brit? In "Muriel's Wedding" I swore up and down she was an Aussie, and then later I heard her speaking with what I thought was a rather proper English accent. And she's good with the American accent, too (see "The Sixth Sense" and "Little Miss Sunshine"). |
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Curmudgeon (Moderator) |
She's an Aussie. |
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Carbon Based Life Form |
uh yeah I was kidding |
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BootsnAll Writer/Area Tourist |
A couple that seem unconvincing to me:
Harry Shearer's British in This Is Spinal Tap - The other two leads seem to stick theirs well enough, but Harry is all over the map. Michael Caine doing American in anything - I guess he's a great actor, but he's never sounded at all American to me. A few I'm amazed by: Portia DeRossi - Is an Aussie and evidently lived there until her early 20s, but I've never (even in interviews) heard her sound anything but American. Kate Beckinsale - I saw her in Last Days of Disco and then Brokedown Palace and only later did I discover she's a Brit. A lot of her peers are completely convincing as well, but she shocked me. German model/actress Diane Kruger and Dutch model/actress Famke Janssen both trained extensively and sound completely American any time they speak English. Janssen has lived in NYC for a long time, but Kruger is even more amazing since she's never really lived in the States. |
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Looking for the Signpost Up Ahead |
Hugh Jackman does a lousy Canadian accent in the "Xmen" movies. But he was better than the cartoons, in which Wolverine was a Canadian with an Aussie accent.
Not one ferret in the movies has ever sounded like a ferret. They always give them the sound of a badger or a chipmunk. Bad animal accents. |
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Holds PhD in Packing |
Ode to Hugh Laurie:
I had been watching House for a little while. One day I was at a cheesy corporate training at work, and the instructor popped in a VHS on world-class customer service, featuring the Dazzling Mr Laurie as a hotel manager. He was hilarious, especially with that fake British accent. Later someone told me it's the American accent that's fake- I was shocked! Turns out Hugh Laurie spent the greater part of his career doing British comedy sketches (check them out, they are knee-slappin' awesome). He is amazing, and, if i say so myself, smokin' hot for a near-50-year-old. *********************** To travel is to discover that everyone is wrong about other countries. ~Aldous Huxley |
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Tough Guy |
I find people like George Plimpton and William F. Buckley jr to be very fascinating. They have an almost extinct American northeast aristocratic accent. Its not British, its not modern American...is it puritan?
I love it when any of the Monty Python guys attempt an American accent, it makes for some truly amazing comedy. Why is it that British people tend to be less inclined to try out other accents. Not just actors but British folks in general rarely bust out a fake accent,(except for this Londonite i met in NYC who could do an amazing Latin tv salesman accent) while I find that to be somewhat common of Americans. And why is it that almost any movie based on a Biblical story has all of its characters speaking in British accents? There is just something about Peter using a cockney accent that just doesnt seem right...I suppose it fits his personality though. |
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Street Food Connoisseur |
He was also in "Sense and Sensibility" as the sensible husband of the odious woman Emma Thompson and Kate Winslett stayed with in London. And speaking of fake American accents, there are several in the TV show "Without a Trace." Poppy Montgomery grew up in Sydney, Australia and Marianne Jean-Baptiste is British. Anthony LaPaglia also grew up in Australia but deliberately lost his accent some years ago. ______________________________________________ Mardee Travels in Turkey 2007 Easter in Italy It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to. ~J.R.R. Tolkien |
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Lost in Place |
Nicole Kidman has a great South African accent in both English and French in "The Interpreter".
“Omnia mea mecum porto.” ~ Cicero ~ |
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Holds PhD in Packing |
Just finished watching boondock saints. OMG- The cops... I dunno where they're from, but I don't think it's Boston- maybe Bill can correct me.
But waaay worse is the guy who keeps going between the Irish and American accents. Half the movie he speaks like a kid from california, the other half he's got some kinda Irish thing going on. Took me twenty minutes to realise the 2 main characters were brothers because of it.... j. |
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Looking for the Signpost Up Ahead |
Jayn. All the cops were from Toronto, where the movie was filmed. All Canadian guys. They don't know from Boston Accents.
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Moderator Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Moderator) |
Granted, the movie Saw sucked and I shouldn't admit to having seen it among such polite company, but Cary Elwes just couldn't decide if he was British or American in that flick. Of course, once you start sawing off your own leg, I guess your voice my change a bit.
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